The Society of Saint Gregory the Great is a membership association of Catholic laity formed in 2008 to promote divine worship in accordance with the Supreme Magisterium of the Church. The Society has its own schola cantorum, and regularly sponsors presentations and workshops on the Sacred Liturgy, Gregorian chant, and sacred polyphony.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

St. Joseph: Fr. Andersen's Homily

It's a day late, but here is Fr. Eric Andersen's homily for the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker.

“When the American Federation of Labor decided to set May 1st, 1886, as the
target date for winning the eight-hour day, which it had been demanding for
years, the only thing in favor of the first of May was that it was moving day,
the usual date when leases and other economic agreements ran out. …The
employers opposed the demand, and so a strike was called for that day. At a
demonstration in Chicago a bomb was thrown – by whom was never known. The
police fired into the crowd, killing and wounding several of the demonstrators.
The labor leaders charged with instigating the demonstrations were tried in an
atmosphere of hatred and hysteria; seven were sentenced to death and four
executed. In memory of these martyrs of the labor movement, the first of May
was adopted internationally as a day given over to demonstrating for shorter
working hours. Only five years later did the International Labor Congress in
Brussels declare it a “festival day” for the first time” (Josef Pieper, In Tune with the World, 73).

The “posters and banners carried in the processions” proclaimed: “This is the
day the people made; it is hallowed throughout the world”; “Socialism, thy
kingdom come!”; “Our Pentecost, when the power of the Holy Spirit of Socialism
rushes through the world, making converts” (Pieper, 75).

What started as an American Labor dispute became a Socialist festival and then
when the Bolshevists took over the celebration, it was no longer a
“demonstration against the existing order. The existing order (became)
identical with the dictatorship of the…totalitarian labor state” (75). The
Catholic philosopher Josef Pieper points out that “The first of May becomes, to
put it briefly, a day that differs from all other workdays and rest days of the
year in that it is celebrated by – additional, voluntary, unpaid work! In lieu
of the demand for a shorter workday, which in the past had been the
justification and the meaning of the day, the workers are asked to accept the
very opposite, ‘the idea of a prolongation of work.’” The Bolshevist Leon
Trotsky is quoted from an official document of 1920: “This holiday is one of
general work.” From the same document Maxim Gorky wrote: “It is a wonderful
idea to make the spring festival of the workers a holiday of voluntary work”
(cf. Pieper 76). Lenin’s government decreed that it was a “‘crime not to
understand’ the purpose of giving that particular form to the holiday” (cf.
76).

By 1922, “May first became more and more exclusively a day on which the Soviet
Union displayed its military strength in gigantic parades. …The very same was
true of the gigantic May Day celebrations of the Nazi regime” (77). “Several
days prior to May first, the state propaganda machine would publish the
following instructions: ‘Decorate your houses and the streets of the cities and
villages with fresh greenery and with the colors of the Reich! …No train and no
streetcar is to ride through Germany that is not decorated with flowers and
greenery!” (78). In 1934 May 1st was renamed “National Holiday of the German
People” and was “the prime occasion for striking displays of weapons of
destruction, which the regime was already accumulating in preparation for total
war" (Pieper, 79).

In 1937, Pope Pius XI issued an encyclical Divini
Redemptoris on atheistic communism, writing: “We place the vast campaign of
the Church against world Communism under the standard of Saint Joseph, her
mighty Protector. He belongs to the working class…and in a life of faithful performance
of everyday duties, he left an example for all those who must gain their bread
by the toil of their hands” (cf. §§ 44, 45).

At that time, the Catholic Church celebrated the feast of Sts. Philip and
James, apostles, on May 1st. There was a moveable Solemnity of St. Joseph,
Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Patron of the Universal Church celebrated
on the Wednesday of the third week after Easter. In 1955, Pope Pius XII
rearranged the liturgical calendar and moved this feast of St. Joseph to a set
date: May 1st, in honor of St. Joseph the Worker. It is odd, therefore, that
the Catholic Worker movement appears to lean more towards protest and activism
than towards the sanctification of work and the imitation of St. Joseph the
worker. The Dominican Fr. Marie Dominique Philippe reminds us, our Lord said,
“Do not labor for the food which perishes [for the pagan does as much] but for
the food which endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give to you”
(Jn 6:27). Fr. Philippe writes that St. Joseph “did not work in order to become
a specialist, or to win a prize, or again for human glory. He worked for the
sole reason that God asked him to; he worked in order to fulfill His will.
Obedience to God, and the fact of being predominantly concerned with doing His
will, gives gentleness to our work. We do not waste time, and we work without
stress or fuss” (The Mystery of Joseph,
50). He relates St. Joseph’s work to the contemplative life: “Our desire for
contemplation gives us an interior freedom which allows us to work in truth and
with determination, thereby making a total gift of all our strength, and
offering our work to God as a holocaust of love” (52).

Fr. Philippe continues: “When work is accomplished in simply the human, natural
perspective, we have a specific goal in mind, which remains on the human plane,
and we become attached to our work. In religious life we discover that it takes
a long time for work, and for our way of working, to become purified. It is not
something that is done in a day, nor even a year; it takes a lifetime, because
it is the whole reality of our human person that is involved in work –
including our sensibility, our emotions…, our imagination, our intelligence and
our will to apply ourselves to what we do” (52).

Now we see a great difference between the work of a communist and the work of a
saint. Today, May 1st, is a day that belongs to the Lord. It is not a day that
the people have made. It is not a day to celebrate the achievements of man or
his military strength. Neither is it a day for protest and dissent and
demonstrations. It is a day to consecrate our work, and to do it well for the
glory of God. This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in
it.